"It was one of those things," said Senators goalie Patrick Lalime, who
faced only eight shots in the first two periods. "We played great. We didn't
give them much. They had a couple of chances right off the bat and then we shut
them down"

Marian Hossa scored twice, Bryan Smolinski and Josh Langfeld added goals,
and Radek Bonk and Martin Havlat had two assists apiece for the Senators, who
have lost only once in their last 14 games (10-1-3).

Lalime made 26 saves for his third shutout of the season and the 31st of his
career.

The win was the Senators' first in three games this season against the
Devils.

"It's a good feeling," Ottawa defenseman Wade Redden said. "We had a few
tough bouts against them earlier this season, but we learned from those. We
were patient and limited their chances."

The first two games between the teams that met in the Eastern Conference
final last year were thrilling, with New Jersey winning 1-0 and 2-1.

This one was no contest. The 11,456 were so frustrated with the Devils after
Hossa stretched the Senators lead to 3-0 late in the second period that they
booed loudly. The crowd was walking out midway through the third period.

Devils goalie Martin Brodeur didn't have a chance on any of the Ottawa
goals. The first three came on an odd-man rush.

"They are a talented team," Brodeur said. "The way we've had success is
to always play them solid and play them tough. They have been playing well, but
today, we didn't show up enough to win this hockey game."

Hossa gave the Senators the lead at 8:04 of the first period with his 21st
goal of the season. Bonk made a nice pass from the sideboards to Petr
Schastlivy, setting up a two-on-one that Hossa finished.

The Senators put the game away late in the second period when Smolinski and
Hossa scored 73 seconds apart.

Defenseman Shane Hnidy made a long pass from his own zone to set up a good
chance by Havlat. Brodeur made the save, but his teammates stood around as
Jason Spezza got the puck and found Smolinski coming down the middle for his
11th goal.

Hossa scored his second goal into basically an empty net on a power play.
Havlat took a pass from Bonk to the left of Brodeur and sent a cross-ice pass
that found Hossa alone on the doorstep.

"Against this team, you don't expect to score four goals," Hossa said.
"We played a solid road game."

Langfeld scored his first career goal with 3:52 to play.

Lalime only had to make one good save in the first two periods, stopping a
shot by Turner Stevenson in the second. Lalime was outstanding in the third,
when New Jersey outshot Ottawa 18-6.

Devils captain Scott Stevens missed his third straight game because of the
flu.